Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 20, 1890, Page 16

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16 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE SUNDAW, APRIL, 20. 1 SIXTEEN PAGES, 300. ! g e 3 \ ) 1 ['l PHIS 1S NOT ALL. To everybody in need of a dollar’s worth of Furniture, Carpets, Stoves, &c.,, we wish to say a word: Call and inspect our MAGNIFI- g On Monday April 21 (To-morrow) we make the most CENT STOCK AND LOW PRICES, and you will not buy elsewhere. generous offer to the people of Omaha and vicinity ever Pay no attention to grumbling and discontented imitators of us. made by any business house in this city. We propose tc 7~ ~ A 3 AL L L I A B Ve alwelys LLead, Never Follow: : [ oy 5000 yards Brussels Carpets. ..., ige b en ey .. This wee 6oc; sold elsewhere for f { ' T MY 5000 yar —al] . ; il A | tooo yards Ingrain Carpets ..... Vs v van el Week d elsewhere for I{lo‘ll l“ |I‘| I)I‘ly‘]\‘ \ E I”(l )' 615 |\;|i1.~ JEEce MEGUETRINE SN ot cesereeeeeeeeen Lhis week 81, d elsewhere for Uk \ J A ')t 470 best quality Smyrna Rug l} s week sold elsewhere for . T y o) ( ! i 114 Baby Carriages ok PRIV ;50 sewhere for 460 Hardwood Refri et snals Hisvecle sewhere for 52 Folding Beds (52 different styles)... ..........This week 229 Bed Room Suites. .. .. S G OO i e ... This week a substantial recognition of the hearty and liberal pat- ' 80 ¢ we have always received at their hands 17 ; sold elsewhere for ron: ; sold elsewhere for FIRST GRAND PRIZE--One beautiful Plush PV:H'II(W $ 100 I\Il:ll‘r’_(ll\\m:lI l\\';]t:xhnllnw ..... O O FROG G G0 0 II s week S0, (1 clsewhere :_nl S T L L O DTG L o OO LD UL St T alue At sl hudotrbiotouon Sy el e 1 S UL Set.. assorted Center Tables........ AN e R s week i sold elsewhere for I SEC UNDI('H;\ND PRIZE--One f'lr‘q.lnt Chr‘\(llv()lnl( $100 10h ot 2o SRKAS G GG Do U0 LOLO: LU OB G This week i sold elsewhere for ¢40.00 Claizhon]stzne SREE 0600 U0 0T G ULo B GO b U b o S alue (ofo) 1BLA A oMY {55500 G G RO b SR iy . This week ¢9.25; sold elsewhere for THIRD GRAND PRIZE -- One handsome Oak Side- $50 1\'";’(1 |[\'H<|\'1'I'~...A.......v.. ........ b This week ¢1.50; sold elsewhere :}»r e e L e R e e T ... Value GCoIMS TOVESERT sl R el el S we $ elsewhere for DEELL . 4 i3 { gl 5OOREATCE GIArSs et SR i i e .« ... Ihis week elsewhere for FOURTH (‘R/\T\iD PRIZE--One Celebrated I‘””“],\'VU;”— $25 [NItGHENASAfes i TR Thak e e v s et .. This week clsewhere for versal Cook Stove...... TR AL e e B0 G B alue ISORGASOIIICHS OV ES ORI LA A gpenarialSEveek d elsewhere for 56 Toilet Sets This week ; sold elsewhere for ) FIFTH GRAND PRIZE--One fine Oak Book Case, 25 S e A I O .. Value SIXTH GRAND PRIZE--One solid Oak eight-foot Ex- $20 9% ALL OTHER GOODS AT EQUALL tension Rableni oo s GRS HR O SRED U OO0 e Value i ! ) SEVENTH GRAND PRIZE--One Gorgeous Plush Oak $ B\ 9 Rocker. ... .. RN R i Value 15 (’1 l]]S 810 worth of goods week or $4 a moath. $30 worth of goods 81.50 n week cr 6 a month. #30 wcrth of goods %2 a woek or 88 a month. 890 worth of goods 2 50 1 wosk 0181Q a month. 3 8125 worth of goods 830 w.ok 0-812a month. $250 worth of goods 85 woek cr 20 a month. Fe b te EIGHTH GRAND PRIZE--One fine Decorated Stand $ Y : ILfh0008) Gobouaoms 306600600 N/EIBIE) 15 I'his Wee Carpets Sewed and Laid this week freo of charge. All of the above Prizes are now displayed in our Show Windows stributed will be as follows: To The conditions under which these gifts will be ¢ every customer purchasing woods at our store between Monday, April 21st, and Friday, July <th, 1890, We will give away ONE 'r[CI\ET WITH EACH PURCHASE OF $1O WORTH OF GOODS, cach and every ticket entitling the owner to a chance in Our Grand Prize Drawing for the above Valuable Presents. The drawing to take place at our store on Saturday, July 5th, 1890, between the hours of 7 and ¢ p. m., and to be conducted - fairly and ope nly by responsible and disintere \1”] parties. Al holders of tickets respectfully invited to atte nd. P. S. No tickets will be issued to any one except those purchasing goods between the above dat All Pipe Gratis with Stoves this week: Springs and Mat- tresses given with overy Chamber Suit $35 and over. An extra rocker with every Par lor Suit. Curt in Poles given away with every pairof lace curtaing Beleeib D e Pictures he did indeed paint. imitations of | other French artist, nde shows more of | think they can force me into their drawing ' TRTIRQ \ HTE TIRIN | ally)=-How the stars twinkle tonight, | friend of the editor is ve particular in (o, that of any | 1 i they fancy that, in the end.they | THOUGHTS IN LIGHTER VEIN. |40 Plaghouse! Would you not like to | instrueting his childven tospeak politely Another faithful friend spirit! - No,no! Neve be the being who rules ‘them? Would | on all oce The resultof histenchs whom' he loatheds copics of | wis Alfred Sensier, to whom the. world s kel i bis T uehor whom e despised portyaits of any- | owes al i laows uf Miler's lite, nplo T E o ath o s e ha 0 heriBh ey — you,mossloveyitopluys jchi offsthalugiingsis fomelimes unuging ’}"' WiEibo S illet, the ¥ who would give him ten franes for a ing supplicd by his -V (R ey ik ety X ; movements? 2 one day last week when he was put- The Stern Dtlm"'m\l“"; "fl Millet, likchoss, These were to pay the baker and the Duriug the. poor artist's. lifetime, | ot subot g gy ground and ot veteeat | geroe 8lotg by the Wits at the Follies and | Mr. Playhouse /@ m v)--Not the youngest of four through his ainter of “The Angelus, landlord. Meanwhile he was conscientiously was his visible providenc ud, after f he g i «“ . ibles 3 v much! I've had the management of weparatory conrse, The guestion wag Eaiute 2 laboring over two works which hie hopad | death, his sympathetic and aceugate. Biogra- | i b roo "ot d Foibles of tle Day. e e e s e R RS Iahlagtmvar —— might be worthy of the salon (annual exhibi- | pher. vhy the me, he would starve S S UNLOYIGELE : S T LeIL SO i g i STREETS OF PARIS Hoe H“” d them in 1840, One was re- The revolution of February, 1868, which | Bub th sto starve with I‘mlr things to take cave of 5 h Hm H\ How, ml;\ a _nllmmmg THE ARTIST ON THE : was accepted-—ill-hung, un- | sent Louis Phillippe as an exilé iuto England | S 4 nis B enurtyrdow, |\ pHE VOTE WAS FROM HIS WIFE, ight Spirit. el S DS ..”1;. cnee ro- i The ivon cntered his soul. | and esfablished a new republie, bronght | S0 K Ak otrolt. B ’e sitor--Youre | Plcd: 3 the gentleman who lives in > not i ch other. | about intense suffering umong the oo [l i St \ e olline o e n ety ol o Uetg | hells L've fovgotten his name His Stenealowith Poverty N T P e Mloring, umaug, the wnem: [l uid faish fall battled with life for the i i Tour_the | SCttng 1o be a pretty old man, Unel ik J R e T ot He e P ROREC ot ol e et EoL (Heiceros ones. But it was hard, it | Advanta pean Tour The | o m e Her Feet W i cution 1 Juries 8 . eh, i atic une'of the Pebruary vevolntion, mido - | 45 terible. Nowonder tite {houeht of sui Wasn't Guilty A Question Uncle Joshun-—Eighty years. Lewiston Jour The woman “Pictures of the Times" to ., and, later, at Cherhourg, he did some of | self the p of the labor | Sdo som 10 il bt it was oy e s Visitor-—And you don't have to use [ who left orders that she | Y T t work in his_nutiy movement tio held tho | thought, s G LI alasses yot, T understand, terredin o vobe that she wouldn be finer than the portraits of the hou portfolio of minister of the interior and pre- | (v Gen B thotshuia the ded thews wie i UncleJoshua-No, an’ [ don't ever cal- | ashamed of at the ressurvection could — T UL m Ao sented measuros designed to compel. the nu | 000 GV NN s I His s iR culate fo, *When I can’t dvink outen a | appreciate the feclings of 8 man of whom 4 did he ever spend more pains, for, ion to give employment to the starving pop f E g N At it e 6. Gresnwood . CorreBpo; t {The fallowing is the second installment in { \unted “to_show his grandimother's soul!” | L 1t was {0 this statesman, i the bier | L0 o an Irancols Mil Lowiston Journal: There is no mis- | "011e: U1 take a dipper an” avinkwater. | the Greonwood correspondont of tho rat Y o 40 | Xithor achiovoment of this period ws. his | s of Nis power. that St Teits et | 6t ad sout on fowaintoillietineict | 8 Lewlston! Jouenul WThera leino inte; e, Oxford Democrat telis the following st i third | “Sailors Mending a u memofy of Chier- | pealed in behalf of a struggling man of genins | IQUIORIICE e e S Sl o p e e | (ako) CA woman died m- Aribi o subject will be | bourg. How faithfully Millet clung to his | whose pictures had been all devoted to the Millet painted some of | te miss whose father had served twe riladelphin Recovd: = Census Enur- | 441005 and one of 1 ted Dublished fh i BEE on Sunday nest.] mission is emphasized by the fact that,though | representation « _edit’ Rollins . works.. ‘They form a | terms in the Maine legisluture, She ntor—Any childie out to procure funds for il rohe. Mo great capital inspired the young Nor: b At intuatoe A Obrbon e ant | (oasa s Rttt el e of toil, in muny books, with | went on a visit tc tive in Oldtown | Housekeeper—One son. Dhoitiatman it intmio sontwiy i an with terror only. Its orowdod streets mplished wuch of his later work there, | had found . place, but mot . purchaser Yy arguments, a hidden plot and a supreme | not long since, accompanied by a lady Male or female? Blunk, who 8 not so. much noted fos man v i d) loft him bo. | e was never tempted to put on v at the exhibition, Mo + minister | conclusion indicated rather than unfolded. [ AL iving late in the cvening at Uncle Malc &k R y bewildered him its vushing life left him be- | G 0G0 MO el o SRy Daee advanced other sums on - commissions f " the epitome * of - daily needs, daily | oy 509y L Deing much Ago? RSV (osantilbly L bR RgOR hind aghast; its pr e was, attimes, borne | Staps, swords, uniforms had no charm tures. Five hundred francs for “The WVim tusks, daily prayers, daily hopes, What sig- | 0/ 2 e YounE o ML ot Story Mr. B. inquired how much the fn upon him like o terrible night-mare, from | him; but man drew his eye and mo ers,” and the commission furids’ on trust. fn : lies teal iDhoilly |(CBMENEA: (WISHOA 10, ROULS COLY | N aaRe, ment in question would cost. *About which he must start up in sheer desperation | hand, man, in common types and common | all less than £500, Seemed. a small fortune to Louis Napoleon | urged her compunson to go with her Murried or sing 5 for o long robe, while o <hort one can ; 4 S ¢ tho | £arbs, working out the divine se the the nter whose “Augelus! i no retlection tid the lady, **T must sit up until Single. be had for considervitble loss. Fhips $3.2 1 wwake to hear the familiar voice of the Augelus is today ;Singl S \ DK $ibg SNE AWHLR 299 e st and God is | Thou shalt carn thy bread in th of | valued at £116,000! 5 Millet's sobe S prayers. That’s all. Thanks. was the reply. Mr, B. et ating that naturo is vast and God i | thy hrow.” * Man, so Taboring, scemed to him | Fecling himself to ba.a rich man, and hio vear of the ulited the ay he Question is Unanswer pockethook and - handed her o $5 bill, tle one, “does Uncle 19 I thought he was a democrut! ) and blessing the “friend of | hibitel Asst( Millet quitted Paris ag a permanent | Man Prepaving f forever, He was happy to follow the | trumpeting and sword clashing v invested with a purpos L’ ecole des Beaux Arts” he felt him- | it was the oftice of art to re self out of havmony with everything, but at | and the idle. nd ' dignity, which | thanking ( 'al to the rich | labo with the remark: “Herve, take this and buy the fiest kind mentioned, | don' wint to meet that woman in heave Mun | ity on feats of strength, [ believ y We the Kly: You are 5 Y 559 —_— ple of Roussean and . fow other sympit- | CRimean war, he oftered his *Picture of_the ] sl e e S A g the Louvre, with Mantegua and Michael “In Silence and in Sorrow." 1 friond, Anding. Wwith them b e <““‘1I_“ 01d Church of Griville & memory of Nor: . What : Cl 5 J :lm.rh doa stranger to the sporting edi- [ (G0 G St o Angelo, he knew he was among friends and |14 wus in 1841 that the young artist, having | home, very small, very poor, but ve ), when'the Austrian warleft | - Detroit Froo Press: “Well, Tll bo ftor, &0 000 e e there his soul found rest. His master Paul | 0ihing foran fncome, naturally thoughs of | ful, almost under the shadow of Fontainc. ved ficlds of the Solferino and h:_m;l'l'tl- I’:« '*\I““L as ]‘l*' oitho | IMMOIBOTaLIRORN 88 PEPPERMINT DROT'S, Delaroche, was the great man of the Pavisian | oo = o0 S0 00 fo. He found | DICAu's mugnificent w great sky, | Magenta, he presented to a uation clariering | window sill in the postoftic y can I do for you?” AU ’ “ art world, The son of arich man, always ,"_‘f'-“' ik Poyenuonuiin e He found 1, "vust “forest und mpanionship | over military teinmphs, “The Angelus,” i with an open letter in his han I wish youto tellmo which is the | Tho bibulous cornetist tuk ¥t g Ist. Tauded as the prince | ¥ u Cherbourg, and loved her because she | opened a new cra, pluin, honest man, a_simple, modest youug | WWhat's the matter?? queried the | stronger, the female shoplifter or the ia ; il g successfu an artist, lauded as the y was modest, fair und virtuous. But theunion womin, pausing, on Satuvday night, over the | oo GRS womin who holds up a train? Noboily;wantaijan’ occan. od foiitho sald of historical painters, holdin kind of die- [ buought little happiness. A poor mun’s wite The Epic of Lab potat to repeat some old prayer, | 'V ’\‘,I“‘ L “\”L A B (S rheum. tatorship in the sehools, there was between |y coqtiy Lo BRSSO nd joyous | “Gathering from the pavement's erevice, as a | While @ chureh bell’ viugs in the distance. 1t Why, I advertised for n lndy SOULGs The Right Clue S AR R Sy hin and his new pupil hardly a foot of ground b bk N g ) lower of the sofl, pives the argument in brief, and casts into | spondent—not over twenty-five—lively Now YorkSan ‘e ent eats all the | cortain able-bodicd men, wake it Santa in common, He professed that he could ot [ SPivi oung Madame Millet was always - The nobility of Tabor, und the long pedigree | this sacred form, as o remembrance of his [ brunette preferred. Heve is my fi Now k Sun: e cat eats ul BraEihE understand this “wild man of the woods,” | feebie, usuaily ill, and, consequently neithe ; of “"'. child: work, which deals with carth; prayer, | ansy g ¥ ‘_J‘. o ( n Queen Elizabeth's time were vuff as his fellow students dubbed the young rus- [ cheerful nor helpful. It was her poor hus Just before this period, Millet had been do- | which deals with heaven! S Any name signed?” Did yau see her 4 on the neck e, SRR | band’s deep vegrer 1 poverty donied | 108 vorltablo.drudgery, elmply to koep tho - 8, *Maude, but [ know the writing ol l“’t(‘ i prnt ot The gubernatorial question is, after all, @ a0 yonrown way, Milleht sald the ¢4 | htin the consolation of her such com- | WO from the door, after selling dratvings for Schopenh. s Last Thoughts, (t's my own wife’s hund, and she is a Don't touch_the caty go and eateh | 45 on tan bave nothing to. sy fo you, and could | forts and delicacies as ler health required | # franc upiece! A severe eriticism on his | fPhe Just thoughts of Arthur Schopen- | blonde, very dull, and over forty yeavs | Johbny forme.” How are you coming on inguived the have nothing to teach you and his own heart prompted. He could never | WOrK: whichi he overheard at a shop window | hauer have been found in a note book | old. +Just think of her check in answer N man of his wet boots In fact, he was right; if a student were [ yecall this period without poignant anguish, { Where one of his pictures was displayed for | in the Hotel d'Angleter the hotel | ing such an ad! No wonder our sex hus T s et The people who disagree with you nevew bound to paint potat ca, what could he learn | When death took her from him after three | sale. roused him by its truth, while it stu wher he died on Septembe 1860, | lost its confidence in women - ”‘ ‘:\ |j\ .:. ‘l ‘“\ A L h-‘\\\"-l 1y |”; C ‘:n \;‘ ¢ from an instructor born to paint princes? | years, the excess of his sorrow bove witness | him by its injustice. From that moment ho | Some of the maxims Sharuotoristio — eyed woman at doo u 0 af hen Columbus fist appeared npon the Delarocho grasped tho trugedies of “Ladv | to' tho dopth of his tendorness 16 | resolved to ho toecio Tio hihat momont X omp otha masimmnre st They Rememnered the Rive, taker, [wish tosee the head of the [ stage he made his eggsit 1 nation conyic- | For example, he says Jane Gray's Exceution,” “Marie Antoinette’s | was at this very time that he at- | tions, come what mi r 3 i A1 o P The, e fumil 1t does not require u legal education to g '\ S 4 [ ¢ i ons, come ght. He wrote to Seu- | hag but onc reey 1 st. [ set Detroit Iy ress ey were two e does not reg w legal education o Death Sentence,” “Nupoleow’s - Abdication,” | tained his first * public success by | sier that he gave up, once and for 5 (1 A8MbUs QRO KAl Laeh-i e ' girl ad “dore Yurup.” and as | Volee (from the inside voom)—H'm! | jnto the son-in-law busing but not the dramus of hoe and I by | sier that he gave up, once and for all, the | Jigtlo stove by w novelist who does not | €irls who had “dore Yurup,” and ule, wash- | the “Milkwoman” and “Riding Lesson,” | mythological, the unidraped tub und milk-pail. Yet, ho saw and ‘valued [ A” little clique of gene R the talent he could not direct, aud when the | Torm a party in his favor. poor young peasant, hurdly able to keep soul | at Cherbours ot Grovill urtain to go up at | H'm! Ahem. There is very little warmth in the witton ss-eyed woman (peremptor- | which the rejected lover receive When Emerson Ao .“I|;|\|\|lwh.l;‘l‘m.- love evil for ita own suke. When you | they waited for the u A o resolvo to his | muke wnew friend think of tho fufure | the matinee ono of themsaids - f ) L, 08 voi dived her sanction, though | enemy who iswlrendy in him. Not one Ol Muggle hhiey sy that the Mle ), James. us artists began to | mi and sought him out | tin It was at Cl wife, it be taken to vy He submitted o)—Keep that cradl ad, “Hiteh your wagon to 1t rec » census taker)—Go | astar,” did he mean marey an aetiess to " dr and Dody together, was about to withdraw | bourg once moro, that be found & wife. is | she it might mean dire strugele and | of : i sissippl vive hat he foun e, His | she ight mean dire struggleand | of tho tortuves of * the inquisition is TR T Iy the lower limbs of & tree should b from inability 10’ pay” the customary fees, | second choice was wiser than his first. Cathe | abje wunt. Henceforth his brush | equivalent tohat of doubt L e ands of folk ahead with your questions, siv, Qniy; the Howar-lmbs.of i trag Mholld -he Delaroche refused to hear of money, and was | erine Lemaire was worthy of her husband, | wits conseerated to the holy task of AT ¥ oS “Iy it possible! “We have scen the i 1RaQ 1L tho Ay tagkurc 0w iy oy 1t th to .1.” ndi1t . " ) k A really freecmmn would be a monster, | 5 The Unattainabl find fault if I more ready to supply han 1o and in her courage and fidelity ho met the | showing forth this great trath: ot labor | i [ a4 | 57 o it ld | Mississippi viyer, huven't wer o A mgn oot i 1 8 One hope there wis” for the needy Norman. | true sympathy and stroug support which his | and laborer, unideulized, stending out in the ABEOli BRI ERLO & 0000, 3. WO YOL coIS Life: She—There, haven't T sharp- | woman will always find fault if she can His future would be secure if he' could win | Tite hid hitherto He had gathered up | grandeur of their actual conditions, have a | PASSbut one:smtence for all crimes W hore was (697 ened that lead pencil 1 A borrowed umbrella is better than #Q - the “Prix de Rowe,” a prizo which bestows [ 400 francs at Cherbourg, and with o sum u majesty and a veligion of their own, | ‘Live, wreteh!l™ And the punishment | (30 CPE Was 16 He Y -cos, cr shed, although not un honest pie on the successful competitor the means of | which seemod to him " little. fortunc, ha which mere sentimentalism fados a3 | would be: too « inhuman, Everything Why, Mi o She—And T can throw a stonc pursuinga completo eourse in the Etemal | treated Catlierine and himself to a smll | “doth the greater glory dim the loas " has been sungye Everything has been [ SBut'we siw so much, you know traight, can't 12 Pight-lacing is possibly entitled to considers city, and with every —advautage. Millet | pleasure trip, by visiting Havre on his way to | Millet's new home, 4 three-roomed cotta cursed, Thereis nothing left for poetry Yes; but how could youever, ever He - Y-c-8, my deav ation as an_ e i micasure, 1L prevonts worked for it desperately, patiently, wavvel | Payis, Some of his pictures we, ond bridge at Pitt outskirts of Fon- [ byt 1o be thae xhibited | wus at Barbizou, on the wing forge of words, | forget how th g then! waist « o « ould like to ] W ul, In | burg almost gave St Well, then I sh 11 t ks ously, but always in his own line. there by friendly artists, and a little gleam of | taincbleau, about’ forty miles from Paris, 1 plunged + (P One duy Deluroche said to him sunshitie fell on'his rough path, ¥ There he found the opon air 1ite ho loved and | Style exhaless the odor of th RUYERRlROsE BoY0- U ONE LI AR [ else u | o k the world | utors -»\]m \lenul Prix de Rome ) Phe very thought of Pavis saddened him. | without which he suffocated. There were ”“fl Tv,u of maehin I expect one that LY Lt woman can’t do, ACH TIGN L A SPhut is why Tam competing for it,” re- | He had buf one wish in conncetion with it, | thegiant trees that for very reverence he al- | Will keep cowse? i He—1I only ki 2 thing, my deav, | “\Wihen 1 plied Millet with stern breyi and that was to get away from it. He re- | most feared to paint. “I don't kuow,” he AR p Culinary Suga % andthabisto: tell i conundruim wIthoud | vt m e B . P SItis useless, my friend," responded the | turned to it reluctantly, and entered on s road | wrote to Sensier, -whut those great . follows, Boston Beacon: My, Newcome WY | forgetting either the question or the | close call here master, *Iwill not send in your name at all, | of sorvows. His “St. Jerome” was rejected | the t aro saying to one unother, but 1 The Bewm in Diamonds, tell the cook o hurry up with those | Orect S 1 * Editha-I wonder why the dudos woar ons Roux is my cholce. But, stiy ou and work. | by the extubition. " He had expended | kuow they say something, and we eannot un The extraordinary rise in the price of | ¢ She has had time to cook them, | 49 . 2 A R L e Noxt year your chance may come vast paius und much time on it, and | derstand it simply because we don't know | dinmonds, in many wses over ol per | suvely St the able to comprehend Could Delaroche comprehend what this | he ~ showed — the iiving acceptance | their language! cont, is exciting considerable attention ikt Planss 3 he don't Burlir s [ SVLInticu BN fhiara meant to the heartsick toiler Simply des: | the judgment aguinst it, und at the. sam But, alas, neither the pure atmosphere, nor | Btk in Artwerp and Ams S [t e 2 in threo mins | gov. Pontaine. e A1 disposition b but pair, or whatever was nearest to despair. It | time iifested his poverty by painting a | the divine calm, peither friendly ! ANA ¥ ) pinjiy, doc il 8 Wholo nelshbarh oo also’ meant leaving Delaroct e for Oue | new picture over ity for lack of more can hood nor_ eheery cottage could brin eral thousand cutters ure out of work, s | utcs ; grow on you tho more you sve of hiu I ! ks t must live, though it be in a threadbare cout, | The study that occupied the place of the ef- | And, with no suecess, no wmor most merchants firmly decline any deal Mps, Newcome—Why, haven't you Popinjiy—Well DpOsE o foot, that racka tho and on scant bread and bad wine, facod, St Jerome,” was “(Edipus Unbound.” | with no money, no security for | ings at the present” prohibitive rate. | clock in the kitchen? fuct is, \ 01 Hantie :: o \‘;" i JA modest little studio was ope ‘\‘«l‘ in the | It only drew down on hima storm of bostile | one day’s happincss. Debts 0 The truth is that powerful syndicate Mury—Yes, ma‘um: but cook 8 1q hter, and thit 0 A B0 IRAYOE, Ruo do I'Est, baurlug tho names of Millet and | eriticism, There was o home-lifo to organize | though ~ Roussean and S whnined till M 15 the exclusive | it's fiffeen winutes 0o slow | T8 niaals ot ms houss Row. Butlonabte ol Marolles. is comrade was one of the ;‘n ina Paris attic, and time went on there , troubles augmented and b right over all stones found in South - - n it hearty friends made among the “gilded | was a growing family to pwovide for, and on For the artist would not ber 3 5 5 What He Would De i} youth” that surrounded Delaroche’s easel. | all poverty, ‘fo iy deid f Sian e By woulh Afvica, und its members are conse L g is Believi ‘ ; L 1w Millet had tatent and Marolles money, thougli | tion! But his wife, vigorons, chearfal, lov \\‘.,.]‘l pibo and rall, and not buy! Ho quently able to regulato prices at will Racket: Little Viola—M won't Atlanta titution: **Wha M the talent, in this partnership, wis un cver- | iug, held hiw by her very trust, as if by | stood on the same ground he had oecupie It is ‘doubtful, however, whethe 00 tum up an’ sit wid me till I ditasleep? | you do, isked o pompous min ¢ o plus as compared to the money. 'The allia @ strong arm, and the little ones, if they were | Delarochi's studio, when his comrades considerable pecuniavy advantage will Mammi-=-Mamu y, durling, and | ow who hud heen bold enov iy was wise, for b supplemented the other, | a burden wud an anxiety, were also a comfort | postulating with him, had received, for all [ acerue from the transiaction, for the dia= | o' come now n k to bed, pet, | pute his sord in an e and their A was sincere and lasting. | und a joy. Moreover, the devoted circle of | answer mond syndicate already finds itself over the angels are with you, had us much ser Ve ‘ Marolles ), with admiration and pity | artist-friends nof ved him, but be S“Whatdo I care! Tdidn’t come here to fe \ echundise whic ut i 1" Rapseatte yut once and ook b 3 ) prov i \ laden with merchun Violu--Dul's wat 00 said before, man blonded, to the silent, grave, austere provin- | lieved in hir ir faith ih me,” he | please any of you! Have I objected to your ) ble lispose of. A few days i start ply ? wbending, so gif said in late Jave Mo : 4 t y unuble to dispose ma, hut de ut didn't show up an’ I's | hes £ | ater yeq gave mo faith in | figures, mado "of butter and honeyt T will | 508 MRS ST LG L sa |'nied atad tor { s0cie ved and softened by the myself Diu 1 and other men of | paint life as I see it, and I will paint the kind | ®# as foreod . 8 B lonesoine b, W : lan, 80 Witty, merry, w mark, appreciated und aided him, but the | of life that I do se ritice, 50 that buyers main! S ot Tt o BAwee bearted w . Had thin dearest and most inti, of these comrades When his “Wood-Cutter and Death' was | present attitude amond 1 \! ; ; b e \ TR PO B« G wut otherwise could was ‘Theodore Rousseau, himself a pre-eminert | rejected by the salon jury, he said: *“They | again procurable ut theiv noimal vate Light i H on (romanties arnul 3 g |

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